Thanks, Jack. There are three topics I'd like to cover. First, an overview of our strong second quarter results across growth and profitability. Second, trends we're seeing across our business in July. And third, a look at our investment discipline and profit expectations for the remainder of the year. In the second quarter, we had strong growth at scale with gross profit of $1.87 billion, up 27% year-over-year. Our strong profitability this quarter is a demonstration of our ability to drive leverage and operating efficiency in our business. Adjusted EBITDA was $384 million, more than two times year-over-year. Adjusted operating income, which, as a reminder, includes expenses related to stock-based compensation and depreciation was $25 million compared to a loss of $103 million a year ago. Let's get into Square and Cash App. Square generated $888 million in gross profit, up 18% year-over-year. Looking at some of the drivers, gross profit from our vertical point-of-sale products was up 37% year-over-year, with each of our restaurants, retail, and appointments products delivering gross profit of more than $100 million on an annualized basis during the quarter. Square GPV was up 12% year-over-year, looking at the components of growth across retention, churn, and acquisition. GPV per existing seller, which effectively measures same-store growth has stepped down since the third quarter of 2022 and has been the primary driver of the moderation in GPV growth since then. We achieved positive growth in acquisition and saw relative stability in churn of existing sellers compared to historical levels. We're seeing strength in our Square banking products, which totaled $167 million in gross profit during the quarter, an increase of 24% year-over-year. Banking products represented 19% of Square gross profit excluding PPP, up from 17% in the prior year. The four biggest drivers of Square banking during the quarter were Instant Transfer, Square Debit Card, Square Savings, and Square Loans. We saw benefits from raising pricing on Instant Transfer earlier this year from recent launches of our banking products outside the U.S. and from interest on Square Savings balances. Lastly, for Square, growing up-market has remained strong with gross profit from mid-market sellers up 20% year-over-year. We believe the total addressable market for the larger sellers segment remains large and highly fragmented and our recent shift in go-to-market efforts is intended to drive further growth upmarket. Cash App generated $968 million in gross profit, an increase of 37% year-over-year. Each component of our inflows framework, Actives, Inflows per Transacting Active, and Monetization Rate grew on a year-over-year basis. During the month of June, we reached 54 million monthly transacting actives, up 15% year-over-year. We've continued to see significantly higher attention for actives with larger network sizes. During the quarter, those with a network of four or more represented more than half of Cash App quarterly transacting actives. Peer-to-peer functionality has allowed us to scale our network rapidly and has driven engagement. In the second quarter, peer-to-peer transactions per actives reached an all-time quarterly high, which helped drive $53 billion in peer-to-peer volume across Cash App during the second quarter, an increase of 18% year-over-year. Inflows per Transacting Active averaged $1,134 in the second quarter, up 8% year-over-year and relatively stable compared to the first quarter, which typically has a seasonal benefit from tax refunds. We believe there is significant runway for growth in Inflows per Transacting Active over time through increased product adoption and growing share of wallet. This tax season more than one-third of Cash App Taxes Actives chose to receive their refund directly into Cash App, a meaningful increase year-over-year, driving new actives to direct deposit. Product adoption has been especially strong for our financial services products, both Cash App Card and direct deposit experienced strong growth in actives and volumes. Monetization rate, which excludes gross profit contributions from our BNPL platform was 1.44%. Monetization was up 16 basis points year-over-year, driven primarily by pricing changes over the past year, and up 3 basis points quarter-over-quarter, driven primarily by the timing of strong first quarter inflows during the tax season. Lastly, our BNPL platform contributed $84 million of gross profit to each of Square and Cash App in the second quarter. GMV from our BNPL platform was $6.4 billion in the second quarter, an increase of 22% year-over-year. Losses on consumer receivables were 1.01% of GMV, relatively consistent with the prior year. Next, an update on July trends. For the month of July, we expect total gross profit growth of 21% year-over-year, which we would orient you to for the third quarter and the remainder of 2023. Looking at each ecosystem, for the month of July, we expect Square gross profit to grow 15% year-over-year, which we expect to be relatively consistent through the third quarter. The moderation in gross profit growth from the second quarter is primarily due to transaction margin compression as we lapse certain benefits from more favorable interchange economics last year. Square GPV is expected to be up 12% year-over-year, consistent with the second quarter as we've seen stability in GPV growth over the past three months from May through July. For the fourth quarter, we expect gross profit and GPV growth to improve slightly compared to the third quarter as Square benefits from more favorable comparisons. For Cash App, we expect gross profit to grow 27% year-over-year in July, and similar to Square, we expect it to be relatively consistent through the third quarter. In 2023, we continue to expect growth on a year-over-year basis from monthly Transacting Actives, Inflows per actives, and Monetization Rate. We expect Cash App's monetization rate in the back half of the year to be more consistent with the second quarter and we expect gross profit to grow more in line with the overall inflows as a result. Given the focus on efficiency, the wind down of Verse will have an impact on monthly actives going forward, although we do not expect an impact to inflows or gross profit. Four the fourth quarter we expect a slight moderation in Cash App's gross profit growth, driven by stabilization in Cash App's monetization rate, and as we lapse stronger growth in the prior year period. For our BNPL platform, we expect year-over-year GMV growth in July to be similar to the second quarter's 22%, with GMV growing faster than gross profit due to regional mix. Turning to our progress against Rule of 40 and our profit expectations for the remainder of the year. Our investment framework sets up an ambitious goal, and we're focused on progressing towards it over the long-term. We'll continue to share updates with you and hold ourselves accountable. Expanding on what Jack touched on, we've worked to deliver efficiencies through the first half of the year. On hiring, we drove leverage compared to our expectations entering the year by encouraging efficiencies among existing teams and prioritizing hiring in more critical areas. We expect our headcount growth in 2023 to be below the 10% target set out earlier this year. With sales and marketing, we've pulled back on lower ROI channels to increase our efficiency, while Cash App's variable sales and marketing expenses namely peer-to-peer and Cash App Card issuance costs were up year-over-year, overall company customer acquisition spend was down year-over-year, driving leverage across Square and Cash App. Despite this pull back, we saw healthy acquisition across each ecosystem as we shifted our mix of spend. And looking at corporate overhead spend, we began to identify cost savings opportunities by downsizing our real estate footprint across some of our West Coast office locations. Given some of these items on a GAAP basis, operating loss was $132 million in the second quarter, which includes the impact of acquisition-related amortization expenses, as well as restructuring expenses for the wind down of Verse and Clearpay in certain markets and write-downs for certain real estate facilities among other items. We expect to find further leverage opportunities in these and other overhead expenses over time. Moving to our full-year 2023 profit guidance. As we have progressed further into the year, we have better line-of-sight into our planned expenses and our updated guidance today reflects this. We're increasing our expectations for profitability in 2023 and now expect to deliver adjusted EBITDA of $1.5 billion and adjusted operating income of $25 million for the full-year 2023. We expect to achieve profitability on an adjusted operating income basis for the year, which is inclusive of share-based compensation expenses. We continue to expect year-over-year margin expansion on both an adjusted EBITDA and adjusted operating income basis. Our updated full-year guidance represents a step-up of $140 million for each figure compared to our prior guidance. This represents both the gross profit momentum in our business during the second quarter and the focus on expense discipline we delivered in the first half of the year, which we expect to continue to drive in the second half of the year. Finally, touching on the third quarter, we expect third quarter non-GAAP operating expenses of $1.55 billion and we expect share-based compensation to increase by approximately $25 million relative to the second quarter. As Jack mentioned, share-based compensation remains an area on which we are focused and expect to drive greater leverage over time. We're excited about the progress we've made towards our investment framework and Rule of 40 this quarter and are eager to continue to work. With that, I'll now turn it back to the operator to start the Q&A portion of the call.